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Bill would make drug price gouging a federal crime

Sen. Schumer introducing bill to make price gouging on drugs in short supply a federal crime

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) -- Price gouging on prescription drugs already in short supply would become a federal crime under legislation about to be introduced.

Sen. Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y., said he's proposing a bill that that would give the U.S. Department of Justice authority to crack down on "unscrupulous drug distributors" who sell hospitals life-saving prescription medicines in short supply at huge markups.

The problem has been growing this year, as shortages have dramatically worsened for normally cheap generic injected medicines that are the lifeblood of hospitals: drugs for cancer, pain, infections, even liquid nutrition and anesthesia for surgery.

The shortages are disrupting care of patients and even clinical trials of experimental drugs that must be tested against older standard treatments.

In September, The Associated Press reported that at least patient 15 deaths since mid-2010 have been blamed on the shortages. In one case in Alabama, nine hospital patients died after getting inadvertently contaminated liquid nutrition that had to be hand-mixed from a powder because the usual liquid version wasn't available.

Schumer's bill is to be introduced next week, an aide told the AP. It would allow penalties of up to $500 million for each case of price gouging.

"Forcing hospitals to buy life-saving medications at outrageously inflated prices is unquestionably unethical, and with this legislation it would be illegal, too," Schumer said in a statement.

A Schumer spokesman said Monday that the senator is working on lining up co-sponsors to the bill. Earlier in October, Schumer requested an investigation by the Federal Trade Commission into possible price gouging by some distributors.

In a typical year, there are always some prescription drugs shortages. But the number of new shortages reported each year has tripled since 2006. As of Nov. 30, there had been 251 different new drug shortages this year.

Multiple causes have been cited, including manufacturing deficiencies leading to production shutdowns, companies ending production of some drugs with tiny profit margins, consolidation in the generic drug industry and limited supplies of some ingredients.

Hospital pharmacists and other officials say the shortages have become a crisis, endangering patients and costing hospitals significant money and staff time to try to obtain crucial drugs not available from their regular suppliers.

Some secondary suppliers say they are helping hospitals get desperately needed drugs by calling pharmacies and other suppliers around the country, and that the drugs have been marked up by other middlemen by the time the suppliers get them.

Politicians, responding to reports of patients harmed by shortages, have been taking up the issue, including President Barack Obama.

On Oct. 31, Obama signed an executive order instructing the Food and Drug Administration to broaden its reporting of potential drug shortages, speed up reviews of proposed production changes for drugs facing shortages, and give the Justice Department more information about possible collusion or price gouging.

That order included a key provision of another bill, which would require manufacturers to notify the FDA immediately of impending shortages of key drugs.

The bill was introduced by Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., and recently was endorsed by the American Medical Association. It's set to get its first committee hearing on Dec. 15, before the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee. A similar bill was introduced in the House by Rep. Diana DeGette, D-Colo.

This Wednesday, the Senate Finance Committee is set to hold a hearing on reasons for drug shortages.

The FDA held a hearing on Sept. 26 on causes and potential steps to address the shortages, three days after the health subcommittee of the House Energy and Commerce Committee held a similar hearing.

Also in the House, Rep. Elijah Cummings, the ranking Democrat on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, has been demanding information from secondary distributors accused of price gouging, asking where they are getting drugs in short supply, how much they are paying for them and what they are charging hospitals for the drugs. That committee held a hearing on price gouging on Nov. 30 and is trying to line up one with manufacturers of drugs in short supply.

 

29 comments

  • Kev  •  5 months ago
    America has the most expensive medical system in the world.Far and away.
    • Kevin 5 months ago
      If you ever seek medical treatment in another country, it amazing how doctors will try to treat you on the spot as opposed to refer you to mulitple labs for testing and schedule more follow up appointments. If the condition is serious enough to warrant all the follow ups, so be it, otherwise it is cheaper to be be treated and released.
  • Crystal  •  5 months ago
    For a country waging such a big "war on drugs" we seem to have the worst problem on the planet! I would rather see people walking around after having smoked pot, after seeing some of these crazies on the pills!
    • d 5 months ago
      War on drugs, what a joke, they cant even keep drugs out of prisons!
  • Zoober  •  5 months ago
    The whole drug industry is price gouging. This is the biggest scam ever pulled on the american people. We take twice as many drugs as the rest of the world and these companies have paid off congress and are allowed to push poison. If we want to stop the ridiculous costs of healthcare then take the money out of politics. These companies will kill for profit and do on a daily basis. They don't care, profits rule. Drug companies should also be blocked from paying off doctors, which have lost their moral compasses also. Greed has destroyed this country and as usual congress leads the way.
  • Swb  •  5 months ago
    This sounds good to me. Little by little I am learning about the incredible price manipulations throughout the entire health system. How big companies get reduced prices for procedures, while the expense for others goes up or the procedure is not covered. How the prescription drug program barred the federal gov't from negotiating lower drug prices for Medicare patients. This sounds like a step in the right direction, thank you Mr. Schumer.
  • None of ya Business  •  5 months ago
    Ask yourself, why is it that medications in either Canada or Mexico are a fraction of the cost that they are in the U.S.? Tell me price gouging doesnt happen on a daily basis in this country..
    • George 5 months ago
      manufacturing drugs is cheap, developing drugs is very expensive (R&D, Trials, etc.) Mexico and Canada do not develop new drugs
    • None of ya Business 5 months ago
      George, that is a retarded response.. So what your saying is that the U.S. should pay more for drugs that they develop and manufacture and the rest of the world should get it cheap.. Wow you have great logic.. BTW I used to work for a laboratory that developed drugs so I bet I know more about the cost of R&D, Trials, etc than you do..
    • Antonio 5 months ago
      None, George is right most of the cost is R&D. You may know the lab end but you don't know the business end. To risk billions on R&D without guaranteeing a return is where the costs of patented drungs comes. Those that manufacture in canada and mexico manu the generic drugs, those that have expired patents.
  • ric  •  5 months ago
    Why not have price control laws on all for profit business?? Politicians are morons.
  • 1Source  •  5 months ago
    The drug companies have been gouging people for years enabled by the bush administration with Medicare Part D which was a give away to the drug companies. He would not allow Medicare, Medicaid or the Veterans administration to negotiate for cheaper prices with their huge buying power. He also blocked the re-importation of drugs from Canada. Did you notice not one republican working to save peoples lives and money? So much for the best health care in the world!
    • Joshua 5 months ago
      spoken like a true Nancy Pelosi follower.
  • RON  •  5 months ago
    has any person been affected by the drug companies testing ? they let loose drugs on the guinea pigs that have not been thoroughly tested so the test bed winds up being all of us that must take a drug, if all these drugs were tested for the 10 years the co.'s claim we would not have near the drugs there is in the market place, ever wonder why after taking some drugs that lawyers and ads come out with saying 'have you taken this drug and suffered injury or death'? the companies are raking in record profits and limited liability on law suits and yes they do price gouge with shortages they produce...but why not do some more de-regulating so that they may conduct maore experiments on the public and get rich along the way, peculiar how rich all the big shots at these companies are and yet they claim they are on the verge of going under, they live big and high on the hog...nothing wrong with making a profit and getting rich, why is that one can go to mexico and buy drugs,yet when buys from canada the same drug from the same company we have warnings about safety, its all about pricing and sticking it to the everyday working and now non working class people, all thanks to the republican do nothing but say no party and collect their paychecks and benefits..all of them are pure unadulterated #$%$ so tight they can't #$%$ they think the treasury is all theirs to spend the way they want, on themselves and their big shot buddies
  • Sid Nukram  •  5 months ago
    Why isn't tax gouging a crime?
    • Gump 5 months ago
      If Thomas Jefferson thought taxation without representation was bad, he should see how it is with representation
  • d  •  5 months ago
    A crime? And big pharma will just pay a fine and go on their way. Merck did it last week
  • Andrew  •  5 months ago
    This ain't going to fly. Hospitals routinely charge absurd prices to maintain revenue. Being billed $10 for 1 tablet of Tylenol, for example, is commonplace. If this IS successfully controlled, then toilet paper used in the hospital will cost $10 per roll... or other billing absurdities.

    Unfettered crony capitalism keeps the profit machines working... ALL at the expense of the common consumer. This political "show and tell" gives bored politicians something to do and makes it look like our system is "working"...... HA!
  • Groover  •  5 months ago
    Price gouging, collusion, monopolies, unfair trade, good all USA Corporate America/Wall Street/Banks/Oil/Insurance Companies at it's best..Ayn Rand would be proud of this...
  • Hello There  •  5 months ago
    Why can't Insurance and Medical system run similar to Government Finance.

    Debt and Deficit... Why is it running as ultra profit enterprise. Why socialize and have a premium of $1000+ / month that lower standards for the people who need care and excludes other who can't afford?

    Through Insurance data it is already known paid members. From AMA and other records we already know Doctors information, From Pharma payroll we already know Opex.
    Plants will always be on Capex.

    New Research + Plants = New Debt
    Pay roll = Opex

    At some point create a structure to wipe out debt at institution level which means prosperity for many.
  • vortex  •  5 months ago
    Is this Healthcare system a joke? Let me see if I got this straight: We are getting an increase in Social Security. The cost of Medicare is going to increase. My health insurance premium has not gone up however, the cost of the services provided to me has increased and there are less services. And then there is the medication issue of changed tiers, increased prices and/or not available at all. I am going to exercise my butt off, eat as healthy as I can and laugh like hell because I intend to not give another penny to a system that needs to be looked at from the peoples point of view...not the pharmaceutical, insurance companies, etc. view.
  • Bruce  •  5 months ago
    How about introducing a bill making it a crime for Senators to be ignorant of basic economics?
  • Time is running out!  •  5 months ago
    Just another way that the government thinks they know better. It is called supply and demand! Who do they think they are telling anyone how much they can charge for something. Next...are they going to tell the grass cutters that they can only charge $25 a yard! It is a slippery slope folks.
  • geezer  •  5 months ago
    I recently read a brief article about pharmaceuticals in US opening labs in China.
    That should be cheaper. Are price controls next? That also requires wage controls in order to work.

    I'm not arguing the need for affordable medications. That's a given, but I've never seen many programs by government that functioned as intended.

    The last experience I had with price controls was during WWII. That was the biggest scam ever put over on Americans. Every business Knew when Government Price Inspectors were coming to town. Untagged merchandise was immediately tagged with the Controlled price, before the inspector arrived. Tags removed on their completed report and gone. I never heard of anyone being fined for price gouging.
    Surely many know how those controls create *Shortages and Blackmarkets*.

    May not apply to drugs, but just an example of the inefficiency in Government to properly enforce anything..
  • Barrister  •  5 months ago
    Healthcare needs to be seriously regulated, just for this reason...greed fuels regulations...because of a few uncaring, greed driven companies, healthcare providers and caregivers, who could care less if a person's life is at stake; They are focused on the dollar rather than doing what is right. If people would just do "The right thing" all would be well in this country.
  • Age of Empires  •  5 months ago
    Reasons of shortages: 1. Patent expiration high decreasing interest in supply 2. Aging population increasing demand 3.Lag in generics to kick in (short term). Solution: ENCOURAGE SUPPLY by deregulating you bolshevik stalin #$%$!!!
  • scott h  •  5 months ago
    If you not going to make money you won't even try.
 
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